Social Services Minister, Christian Porter, should dump plans to cut the income of most single breadwinner families by more than $54 a week, according to the Australian Catholic Council for Employment Relations (ACCER).
In a statement released this week through the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference, Brian Lawrence, Chief Executive of ACCER, and Marcelle Mogg, from Catholic Social Services Australia, said the Coalition Government should not be taking Family Tax Benefit Part B (FTB B) from low and middle income families with school-age children.
“The proposal discriminates against couple-parent families and would leave them and their children at a lower standard of living,” Mr Lawrence said.
The 2014 Budget proposed withdrawing FTB B from low and middle income families with school-age children. This proposal is still before the Senate. FTB B is a government payment to assist families with one main income and single parents with the costs of raising their children.
“In the case of single breadwinner couple families with two children aged eight and 12, where the breadwinner is on the National Minimum Wage of $656.90 a week, they would lose 9.2 per cent of their net wage,” Mr Lawrence said.
“Where the breadwinner is on the base trade-qualified wage rate of $764.90 a week, they would lose 8.1 per cent of their net wage.”
“FTB B is paid mainly to women,” Ms Mogg said. “This proposal is inherently discriminatory against women because it would deprive them of income while they are absent from the workforce and raising children.
“FTB B helps parents make an effective choice as to how they will balance work and family responsibilities. If implemented, the proposal would place economic pressure on couple-parent families to abandon plans to have one of them stay at home to care for their children. In sole-parent families, it would place more financial pressure on the parents to work more hours than they have had to in the past.”
“The proposed reduction in the social safety net would require increases in low income safety net wages and reverse the practice in recent decades of limiting wage increases by reason of successive increases in the social safety net,” said Mr Lawrence.